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Joel Koshy commented on KAFKA-1625: ----------------------------------- Not that I know of, but the new producer is implemented in Java anyway and the new consumer (also Java) is being developed. > Sample Java code contains Scala syntax > -------------------------------------- > > Key: KAFKA-1625 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-1625 > Project: Kafka > Issue Type: Bug > Components: website > Reporter: David Chen > Assignee: David Chen > Attachments: KAFKA-1625.site.0.patch, KAFKA-1625.site.1.patch > > > As I was reading the Kafka documentation, I noticed that some of the > parameters use Scala syntax, even though the code appears to be Java. For > example: > {code} > public static kafka.javaapi.consumer.ConsumerConnector > createJavaConsumerConnector(config: ConsumerConfig); > {code} > Also, what is the reason for fully qualifying these classes? I understand > that there are Scala and Java classes with the same name, but I think that > fully qualifying them in the sample code would encourage that practice by > users, which is not desirable in Java code. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)